Have you ever considered all the moving parts it takes for a project to be successfully completed?
Engineering teams rely on strong leadership, communication, and management to ensure
projects are completely on schedule and within budget. Developing project management
skills is essential for engineers who want to skillfully lead successful projects,
become more efficient, and add value to their organization.
What is Engineering Project Management?
Engineering project management uses project management methodologies and processes
to manage all aspects of projects, including scheduling, purchasing of materials,
approval of plan documentation, and budget and cost management. Effective project
management ensures work is delivered to specification, completed on schedule and within
or below budget, and follows all regulatory or legal requirements.
6 Benefits of Studying Project Management for Engineers
There are many ways that gaining project management knowledge can benefit engineers.
6. Improve Efficiency
Studying project management allows engineers to learn the processes, procedures, and language to improve project planning, delivery, and handover. Since you’ll have a better understanding of how projects operate, including the phases of project management, you’ll be able to find areas of improvement and opportunity.
“Almost all functions in a company benefit from project management skills, and particularly engineers,” according to Tracie Thompson, PMP, Corporate Director of Project Management, Systems Company GM, L3 Harris Technologies.
“While engineers specialize in the technical scope and requirements of a program,
development of skills in decomposition of work scope, budgeting, scheduling with required
constraints, risk and opportunity management, and change control will not only advance
their skills but ensure successful program execution. Successful program execution
results in career advancement and positions with increased responsibility. It also
improves efficiency and allows focus on the specific requirements of the programs.
At many companies, basic project management skills are required for most engineers
to advance, particularly system engineers.”
5. Gain a Common Operating Language
Studying project management will provide you with a common operating language and
vision for how project management is conducted. You can make informed decisions and
communicate with the project managers and leaders in your organization. Additionally,
you’ll have the knowledge to review past projects to see how they could be improved
by applying the structure outlined by leading project management organizations like
the Project Management Institute (PMI).
4. Replicate Success
Instead of reinventing the wheel for every single project, creating templates, checklists,
and standard operating procedures (SOPs) allows you to repeat success without starting from scratch for every project. Creating
a flexible SOP that you can apply to multiple projects will help you standardize the
majority of needed tasks from one project to the next, so that you can work smarter,
not harder.
3. Go Beyond Execution
Once you create a standard framework for project management that you execute consistently, you’ll have time to focus on areas of opportunity, such as monitoring the project’s key performance indicators, communicating more with the client, and conducting risk assessments, according to Thompson.
“When [engineers] fully understand the scope, schedule, and budget of a project, along
with the quality and technical requirements, it allows for better identification of
risks and opportunities for project success. The ability to escalate that risk, identify
and manage change, and develop corrective action for variances to the plan relate
directly to on time delivery and quality and therefore future business. Satisfied
customers return. Minimizing change, managing schedule and risks results in lower
program costs and therefore more profit.”
2. Deliver Value to Your Organization and Clients
The goal of project management is to ensure that projects are executed on schedule, within scope and budget, and deliver value to the customer. Mastering the tools and techniques means you’ll be able to be consistent, which is a huge asset as an engineer.
According to Christian Knutson, an engineer who earned his Project Management Professional (PMP) certification,
“Once you become consistent in the way you manage your projects, the people you work
with will become increasingly confident in your ability to organize, execute and succeed.
From an engineering career standpoint, being consistently effective is a major asset.”
1. Advance Your Career
Developing project management skills is a great way to advance your engineering career for several reasons.
First, developing project management skills provides you with a foundation of leadership, communication, and strategic assessment knowledge that positions you for leadership roles on your team and organization, whether that’s becoming a senior engineer, director, or higher.
Also, studying project management can allow you to pursue engineering project manager roles, which can be a great next step for engineers looking to lead project teams.
Finally, project management skills are applicable across all industries, so studying
them means you can move to a different company or even another industry if you want
a career change.
Project Management for Engineers
USF Corporate Training and Professional Education’s Project Management for Engineers workshop allows engineers to build a foundation for effective project management. In this fully self-paced course, you'll learn how to lead successful projects, earn organizational buy-in for your decisions, and gain a workbook of tools to guide you in every step of the project management process.